One thing that became clear in reviewing these
things is that we tell children really stupid stuff.
Telling kids that if someone is picking on them they
should just ignore it? That's worse than stupid.
Yeah, some bullies might get tired and move on, but
a lot of them will get much worse. When their motivation is attention,
withholding attention might just make them try harder. For me, they just got
bolder until I lashed out.
Worse than that is the impact on the one doing the
ignoring. The times when I ignored abuse are the same times that I internalized
it. When I stood up for myself, I felt much better, like maybe I was worth
defending. Maybe I was worth something. What I ignored, I carried around for
years.
Another really wrong-headed thing we tell girls (and
sometimes boys too) is that if someone is picking on you it's because he likes
you.
It took me a long time to be able to talk about what
happened that day. The first time I told someone, it was a counselor and I was crying.
I lied to her that I understood now that it didn't really mean I couldn't be
loved, because I still could not accept it, and if I told her that she would
have kept going.
The second time I had trouble breathing, but I could
keep from crying as long as I didn't make eye contact. Most recently, I talked
about it with one of the friends who had been there.
She told me that in the summer after that, she had
been hanging out with another girl and some guys, including Steve, and he
propositioned her. "You know what they say about when guys pick on
you..."
That seems like a terrible response. In her defense,
we were talking about how impossible it is for me to feel attractive because of
that, and she was pointing out that it could have happened because I was
attractive.
It still doesn't make me feel attractive because it
was abusive.
I have thought of that, since we talked. Maybe
"What do you think?" was not a dismissal, but an opening. Then it all
just seems horribly twisted.
That can fit into a larger discussion of competition
and hierarchy and the need to put other people down, and it is worthwhile to
have that discussion, but that's not where I'm going now.
It feels important to spend some time on that rather
broad definition of "likes". The word itself has positive
connotations, but we're not using it that way if we're associating it with
abuse.
In that context "likes" can mean...
- feels attracted to you but resents that attraction because you are not the type that he believes he should be attracted to.
- feels attracted to you but doesn't believe he can get you, so he resents that.
- feels attracted to you but has a twisted view of male/female relationship where "liking" does not provide any reason to treat with kindness or respect.
- wants to have sex with you, or grope you, or at least get to see your breasts, with or without your cooperation and definitely without any worries about the emotional impact on you.
But it's a compliment. Then I think about teenage
girls who romanticize jealousy because it shows how passionate he is about you,
as opposed to possibly being a better sign of him thinking he can and should be
able to control you.
I have friends who have been beaten by men who loved
them, and lied to and raped and all sorts of horrible things by men who wanted
them. Some of those men were bad people, and some could have been better people
with some better role models for how to treat people, and in a society that
doesn't regard women as property, so yes, there is a lot of room for
improvement there.
There is room for improvement in our understanding
of how to win fights. Those times when I stood up for myself, I did so by being
really mean. With two people who made fun of me for being fat, one I shamed for
failing fifth grade, and one I told "I wouldn't talk with that face".
And it was good in that these incidents didn't haunt me, but still not a great
way to relate to people. The one kid was really hurt, and the other one might
have been hurt underneath wanting to kill me.
I would like to have better strategies to offer.
Sometimes I think maybe I should have just kept asking people "Why?",
like an annoying child. It certainly wears parents down. (Why do you want me to
go out with you? Why would I want to? I don't know.)
Until we get there, let's not pretend that
harassment is a compliment or that abuse is cute or that the best strategy is
silence. When we know that society sucks and don't know how to fix it, the
answer is not to lie.
No comments:
Post a Comment